Tic Tac Drop is a puzzle video game developed and published by Microsoft in the Microsoft Entertainment Pack 4 for Windows 3 in 1992. The game is a rendition of Connect Four but with several additional features like the ability to customize the size and shape of the play field as well as the length of line needed to win.
In "Go Figure!", the player is given a selection of four numbers and they must use addition, subtraction, multiplication and division to devise a calculation that will match a target number. The player scores points for every equation they solve within the game's time limit. There are skill levels, a hint function and a high score table.
Cell War is a shareware strategy game that can be played against either the computer of another human player. It is a turn based game; when each player has completed their turn the game board is updated. When both players pass the game is over and the score is calculated with the winner being the player with the highest average number of cells throughout the game.
Samochodowy Wojownik is an arcade racing game with shooter elements. You are the driver of the police combat car - Ferrari 1200 DRX, struggling with a gang of smugglers in the suburbs. During the patrol, you will encounter the vehicles of the criminals and the criminals themselves who will try to eliminate the threat.
The game is currently "Lost Media".
4 Queens Computer Casino is a video game published in 1992 on DOS by Applications Plus, Inc.. It's a simulation game, set in a cards and casino themes.
Pensate is a single-player, shareware, strategy/puzzle, turn based game that is based on the 1983 game by Penguin Software. This implementation is played on an 8x8 board and has ten levels. The players objective is to navigate their piece from the bottom of the board to the top, their token can only be moved horizontally or vertically. Also on the game area are opposing pieces which behave like chess pieces which move position every time the player makes a move, so the migration from the bottom of the screen to the top is complicated by the need to avoid being captured by these pieces.
Kye is a real-time puzzle game with a variety of interacting objects. It takes ideas from puzzle games like Sokoban and Boulder Dash, but the inclusion of active objects gives it a real-time component, and it can also produce arcade-game levels like those found in Pac-Man. Anyone can create new levels for the game.
Designed for Microsoft Windows environment as stress relief for that busy office. Titles include:
- Chess
- Chip's Challenge
- Dr. Black Jack
- Go Figure! (mathematics theme)
- JezzBall (Qix clone - trap bouncing balls)
- Maxwell's Maniac (pong clone)
- Tic-Tac-Drop (puzzle game)
Microsoft Golf is a golf simulation game based on the Links. You have 18 courses you can play. You also have the ability to change to numerous different clubs and type of shots depending on the wind and terrain.
Take a Break! Crosswords is a collection of puzzles licensed from Dell. Volume I represents the 375 crossword puzzles from Dell Magazines, where you have to put the word, which is an answer for the certain question, in vertical or horizontal line of table. These words have common letters because of crossing and it allows to remember the word by available letters in already resolved words.
Like the name suggests, Breakout 3000 is a Breakout game. So you have a screen filled with bricks, a ball and a paddle. Destroy all bricks with the ball. Use the paddle to bounce the ball back into the playfield when it's about to leave the screen.
The game offers 23 levels to play. The more levels you play, the faster will be the game, but also the more special bricks you encounter (exploding bricks, which destroys adjacent bricks; extra lives; etc.) and the more different background themes you will see.
JezzBall is a video game originally published for Microsoft Windows in 1992. The player must capture parts of a rectangular space by dividing it with horizontal or vertical lines. While each line is being drawn it must not be touched by bouncing balls. JezzBall has similarities with Qix, a 1981 arcade game.
CyberSpace Crossword is a freeware three dimensional crossword puzzle.
The player starts at a point in cyberspace some distance above the puzzle and navigates to it using three slider controls that adjust the player viewpoint in each of the three dimensions. Upon nearing the puzzle the game begins and the player is offered the first clues. Cell 1 is preselected for the player to enter a letter. None of the cells are numbered, however when selected a cell changes colour and any associated clues are displayed in a window in the lower right corner of the game area. Answers are entered letter by letter and to do this the player must select each cell individually, enter a letter, then select the next cell, enter the next letter and so on.